LAS VEGAS--It was one of Carly Fiorina's toughest missions since assuming the helm of Hewlett-Packard: trying to rally confidence just hours after her company reported bleak financial news that sent the stock markets reeling.

at the Comdex trade show here, the chief executive of one of the world's largest computer corporations did her best to focus the crowd on the future. After leavening the atmosphere with some gallows humor about the financial news, she exhorted an audience of thousands to make everything they create--computers, gadgets, software and services--a part of the Internet and available to anyone.

The result will be a second Renaissance, with all the world using the
Internet, not just the rich, computer-literate minority of today, said
Fiorina, who in college studied the replacement of the medieval era with
what she called a more enlightened time.

"The next phase of growth will be exponential only if every solution you can
contribute can connect with every other solution on the planet," she said.
"Anything else holds everyone back. It is medieval thinking."

Not surprisingly, HP has a vested interest in such a future. In a
transformation that began shortly after Fiorina's arrival more than a year ago, the
Palo Alto, Calif., company has been aiming its products at markets that can
benefit from expensive back-end servers, Internet-enabled devices such as
PCs or cell phones, and Internet services such as banking, language
translation and personal calendars.

Along the same lines of connecting everything to everything else, Fiorina
announced a partnership with Finnish cell phone giant Nokia that will enable
Nokia phones to connect to HP printers and print anything available on the
Web, including email and theater tickets.

While HP has stuck doggedly to its vision for the future of the Internet,
the road hasn't been a smooth one. Before the markets opened Monday, HP reported financial results well
below Wall Street expectations.

"It had already been somewhat of a long morning for HP," Fiorina said at the
beginning of her talk. "Do CEOs get to ask for a recount?" she joked,
referring to the current presidential election turmoil.

Fiorina's speech harkened back to her Comdex keynote last year, when she called for an era in which computing technology is easier to use. "To make the Net useful, meaningful and indispensable, you have to start with people, not technology," she said Monday.

One technology HP backs to realize its Internet vision is Bluetooth, a short-range wireless netowrking technology HP is building into its notebooks and printers, Fiorina said. "The physical and digital worlds are being intertwined," she said, and Bluetooth will let each computing device "take full advantage of the resources around it"

When it comes to the software underpinnings that will allow gadgets to join together and take advantage of each other's abilities, Fiorina plugged HP's E-speak software and took a jab at rival Sun Microsystems' Jini software.

E-speak is designed to connect tens of millions of devices and has security features built in, a key feature when a device is communicating with others operated by strangers. Though she didn't mention Jini by name, she did criticize Sun's Remote Method Invocation (RMI) software, which is at the heart of Jini.

In another veiled jab at Sun, whose dominant position with its Java software long has irked HP, Fiorina advocated an egalitarian approach to new Internet technologies. In particular, she said that before HP agreeed to join the Universal Description Discovery and Integration (UDDI) consortium, the company required "equal voting rights to all members as a condition for our participation."

UDDI, advocated by Microsoft, Intel and others, defines a standard way to build a sort of directory that describes services available over the Internet.

"At HP, we were advocating openness long before it was popular," Fiorina boasted.

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